Check out my articles for more!
http://estess.hubpages.com/_youtubetrack/hub/paper-money-history
http://estess.hubpages.com/_youtubetrack/hub/Chinas-Strategy-Appreciating-the-Yuan
Full video can be found at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fW3fZzfHEX4

A currency war sounds weirdly abstract, like a game played by rival politicians -- but it can have devastating effects in the real world. And it's not all that different from a rivalry of different kind -- a hypothetical sibling rivalry.

A lot of economists go on and on about how currency devaluations help exports and, well... they do. However, if one country does it, others will follow suit and currency wars are just around the corner.
As the name suggests, the countries engaged in a currency war keep doing everything they can to make sure their currency depreciates and each time one of the players engages in competitive devaluations, everyone else tends to reciprocate. A race to the bottom, if you will.
Please like, comment and subscribe if you've enjoyed the video.
To support the channel, please buy my Wealth Management2.0 book. You can find it by searching for "Wealth Management 2.0" on Amazon, Barnes&Noble, iBooks or Kobo. For more information, visit WealthManagement2.com.

Currency Wars

Currency Wars (simplified Chinese:货币战争; traditional Chinese:貨幣戰爭; pinyin:Huòbì zhànzhēng) by Song Hongbing, also known as The Currency War, is a bestseller in China, reportedly selling over 200,000 copies in addition to an estimated 400,000 pirated copies in circulation and is reportedly being read by many senior level government and business leaders in China. Originally published in 2007 the book gained a resurgence in 2009 and is seen as a prominent exponent of a recently emerged genre labeled "economic nationalist" literature. Another bestselling book within this genre is Unhappy China, however, unlike this and other books within this genre, Currency Wars has been received more positively by the Chinese leadership as its recommendations are seen as less aggressive towards the US. The premise of this book is that Western countries are ultimately controlled by a group of private banks, which, according to the book, runs their central banks. This book uses the claim that the Federal Reserve is a private body to support its role. More than one million copies of this book have been sold.

James Rickards

James G. Rickards is an American lawyer. He is a regular commentator on finance, and is the author of The New York Times bestsellerCurrency Wars: The Making of the Next Global Crisis, published in 2011, and The Death of Money: The Coming Collapse of the International Monetary System, published in 2014.

Currency

A currency (from Middle English:curraunt, "in circulation", from Latin:currens, -entis) in the most specific use of the word refers to money in any form when in actual use or circulation as a medium of exchange, especially circulating banknotes and coins. A more general definition is that a currency is a system of money (monetary units) in common use, especially in a nation. Under this definition, British pounds, U.S. dollars, and European euros are examples of currency. These various currencies are recognized stores of value, and are traded between nations in foreign exchange markets, which determine the relative values of the different currencies. Currencies in this sense are defined by governments, and each type has limited boundaries of acceptance.

Other definitions of the term "currency" are discussed in their respective synonymous articles banknote, coin, and money. The latter definition, pertaining to the currency systems of nations, is the topic of this article. Currencies can be classified into two monetary systems: fiat money and commodity money, depending on what guarantees the value (the economy at large vs. the government's physical metal reserves). Some currencies are legal tender in certain political jurisdictions, which means they cannot be refused as payment for debt. Others are simply traded for their economic value. Digital currency has arisen with the popularity of computers and the Internet.

War

War is a state of armed conflict between societies. It is generally characterized by extreme collective aggression, destruction, and usually high mortality. The set of techniques and actions used to conduct war is known as warfare. An absence of war is usually called "peace". Total war is warfare that is not restricted to purely legitimate military targets, and can result in massive civilian or other non-combatantcasualties.

While some scholars see war as a universal and ancestral aspect of human nature, others argue that it is only a result of specific socio-cultural or ecological circumstances.

In 2013 war resulted in 31,000 deaths down from 72,000 deaths in 1990. The deadliest war in history, in terms of the cumulative number of deaths since its start, is the Second World War, from 1939 to 1945, with 60–85 million deaths, followed by the Mongol conquests which was greater than 41 million. Proportionally speaking, the most destructive war in modern history is the War of the Triple Alliance, which took the lives of over 60% of Paraguay's population, according to Steven Pinker. In 2003, Richard Smalley identified war as the sixth (of ten) biggest problem facing humanity for the next fifty years. War usually results in significant deterioration of infrastructure and the ecosystem, a decrease in social spending, famine, large-scale emigration from the war zone, and often the mistreatment of prisoners of war or civilians. Another byproduct of some wars is the prevalence of propaganda by some or all parties in the conflict, and increased revenues by weapons manufacturers.

Currency war

Currency war, also known as competitive devaluation, is a condition in international affairs where countries compete against each other to achieve a relatively low exchange rate for their own currency. As the price to buy a country's currency falls so too does the price of exports. Imports to the country become more expensive. So domestic industry, and thus employment, receives a boost in demand from both domestic and foreign markets. However, the price increase for imports can harm citizens' purchasing power. The policy can also trigger retaliatory action by other countries which in turn can lead to a general decline in international trade, harming all countries.

Competitive devaluation has been rare through most of history as countries have generally preferred to maintain a high value for their currency. Countries have generally allowed market forces to work, or have participated in systems of managed exchanges rates. An exception occurred when currency war broke out in the 1930s. As countries abandoned the Gold Standard during the Great Depression, they used currency devaluations to stimulate their economies. Since this effectively pushes unemployment overseas, trading partners quickly retaliated with their own devaluations. The period is considered to have been an adverse situation for all concerned, as unpredictable changes in exchange rates reduced overall international trade.

Jim Rickards: Currency Wars Simulation

Check out my articles for more!
http://estess.hubpages.com/_youtubetrack/hub/paper-money-history
http://estess.hubpages.com/_youtubetrack/hub/Chinas-Strategy-Appreciating-the-Yuan
Full video can be found at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fW3fZzfHEX4

Why you should care about currency wars

A currency war sounds weirdly abstract, like a game played by rival politicians -- but it can have devastating effects in the real world. And it's not all that different from a rivalry of different kind -- a hypothetical sibling rivalry.

A lot of economists go on and on about how currency devaluations help exports and, well... they do. However, if one country does it, others will follow suit and currency wars are just around the corner.
As the name suggests, the countries engaged in a currency war keep doing everything they can to make sure their currency depreciates and each time one of the players engages in competitive devaluations, everyone else tends to reciprocate. A race to the bottom, if you will.
Please like, comment and subscribe if you've enjoyed the video.
To support the channel, please buy my Wealth Management2.0 book. You can find it by searching for "Wealth Management 2.0" on Amazon, Barnes&Noble, iBooks or Kobo. For more information, visit WealthManagement2.com.

Donald Trump and China's Currency War!

Donald Trump flayed China and called it a CurrencyManipulator in his Speech. - On April 2016, a Treasury report targets five countries in particular: China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Germany. Each meets at least two of the three criteria that "determine whether an economy may be pursuing foreign exchange policies that could give it an unfair competitive advantage against the United States."
At a time when currency devaluation has become a major tool used by multiple countries to stimulate growth, the U.S. is looking to protect its own interests. The report is an outgrowth of the Trade Facilitation and TradeEnforcement Act of 2015, a bipartisan effort aimed at stemming the global race to the bottom.
The criteria to determine whether a country should be on the "Monitoring List" of countries using unfair currency practices are: a trade surplus of larger than $20 billion, or 0.1 percent of U.S. GDP; a trade surplus with the U.S. that is more than 3 percent of that country's GDP; "persistent one-sided intervention," defined as purchases of foreign currency amounting to more than 2 percent of the country's GDP in a one-year period.
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "EXPOSING: Roman Curia (Catholic Church) And Global Pedophila Networks"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mxGgRSRDuRM
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

Currency Wars and What Happened with the Swiss Franc?

Just a really quick and simple video explaining:
- What happened the other day with the Swiss
- What is a currency war and why it happens
- How to profit from the ECB launching a QE program!
More info, please visit: www.InvestingStarterPack.com and www.TheRealisticTrader.com
This is only a basic explanation. I have to state (for the more technical minded) that QE doesn't necessarily mean that they will 'print' more currency. Typically the way the CentralBanks do QE is by buying up bonds or other asset backed securities. For instance, the FED in the US mainly bought US TreasuryBills.
If the ECB does do QE then it's likely to do it with mortgage backed securities and a selection of Eurobonds. But all you need to remember is that QE is just a way for a Central Bank to control how much of their currency is out there and to get more of it circulating. And the more Euros they can get out there by buying 'stuff', the more it dilutes/devalues the currency...which then makes the currency fall in value against others...

CURRENCY WARS AND MANIPULATION (CHINA & THE YUAN) [EITS #11]

Are we on the verge of seeing a new currency war? China is in a bad situation with their foreign currency reserves and PresidentTrump is not going to accept any more currency manipulation. What will happen? Is this a crisis for China?
Key points in the video:
================
- China has been experiencing impressive levels of growth, but it is non-productive and artificial.
- China has been managing its intrinsic instability through currency manipulation.
- Fear of a currency war has led to massive levels of capital flight, and foreign reserve levels are shaky.
- It appears that China's only feasible option will be to devalue the yuan, leading to negative effects for the global economy.
Based on "China, The Yuan And The Elephant In The Room" article we published on Seeking Alpha:
http://seekingalpha.com/article/4046733-china-yuan-elephant-room
================
JOIN US TO LEARN TO TRADE FOR FREE: http://bit.ly/DuomoInnerCircle
================
SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE TRADING VIDEOS: http://bit.ly/DuomoYouTube
================
GET OUR FULL ONLINE COURSE: http://bit.ly/DuomoCourse
================
SOCIAL LINKS:
Website: http://www.duomoinitiative.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/duomoinitiative
Twitter: http://twitter.com/duomoinitiative
Nicholas Twitter: http://twitter.com/nikipuri
Instagram: http://instagram.com/duomoinitiative
Email: contactduomo@duomoinitiative.com

32:03

Jim Rickards: Currency Wars and The Death of Money

Jim Rickards: Currency Wars and The Death of Money

Jim Rickards: Currency Wars and The Death of Money

http://www.nomadcapitalist.com
Jim Rickards' keynote speech at Nomad Capitalist's Passport to Freedom conference in Cancun, January 2015.
Jim discusses the world's Currency Wars, the coming Death of Money, and how to survive and thrive in a world awash with money.
-----
ABOUT NOMAD CAPITALIST
Andrew Henderson travels to nearly 30 countries every year to stay up to date on the latest legal strategies for entrepreneurs and investors to pay less tax, grow their money faster, and build their personal freedom.
Andrew started Nomad Capitalist to help people like you follow his five magic words: "go where you're treated best". He has personally started foreign companies, opened offshore bank accounts, and obtained multiple second passports.
He also learned the hard way that perpetual information seeking is often the biggest barrier to getting the results you want. Many entrepreneurs spend months and even years constantly researching how to pay less in tax or live overseas, but are afraid to make the jump.
As a result, they get stuck and keep paying a fortune in taxes and never get the lifestyle they deserve.
Nomad Capitalist's Youtube channel is based on Andrew's vision that focusing on the end result, rather than the latest shiny object, is the best way to actually obtain the benefits of the Nomad Capitalist lifestyle.
About Andrew: http://www.nomadcapitalist.com/about/
Our website: http://www.nomadcapitalist.com
Our blog: http://www.nomadcapitalist.com/blog/
Work with Andrew: http://www.holanomad.com/

1:58:34

Currency Wars and Reform of the International Monetary System

Currency Wars and Reform of the International Monetary System

Currency Wars and Reform of the International Monetary System

Drawing on his 45 years at the center of international economic policy debates, C. Fred Bergsten argues that currency manipulation is the single biggest challenge facing the world economic system and costs millions of jobs. Bergsten offers bold proposals for countervailing intervention and ties between the International Monetary Fund and the World Trade Organization in evaluating currency misalignments. Following his talk, he is joined in discussion by Rohinton Medhora, CIGIPresident.

24:35

Jim Rickards: Will Currency Wars Reorder the World?

Jim Rickards: Will Currency Wars Reorder the World?

Jim Rickards: Will Currency Wars Reorder the World?

Our guest this weekend is Jim Rickards, the author of the 'New York Times' bestseller 'The Death of Money' and a well-known expert in geopolitics and global capital.
Jim and Jeff discuss the unfolding drama at the Fed, which can't decide when—if ever—QE will come to an end. They also discuss possible endgame scenarios for liquidating unprecedented amounts of sovereign, commercial, and household debt; whether coming monetary shocks will present the IMF with an opportunity to demand a global currency reset, and who wins and loses when the game of musical chairs stops. This is a must-hear interview for anyone interested in currency wars, central banks, and the unholy politics behind it all.
See Jim Rickards' 'Strategic Intelligence' newsletter: http://agorafinancial.com/publications/awn

Jim Rickards: Currency Wars Simulation

Check out my articles for more!
http://estess.hubpages.com/_youtubetrack/hub/paper-money-history
http://estess.hubpages.com/_youtubetrack/hub/Chinas-Strategy-Appreciating-the-Yuan
Full video can be found at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fW3fZzfHEX4

Currency Wars: Jim Rickards

Why you should care about currency wars

A currency war sounds weirdly abstract, like a game played by rival politicians -- but it can have devastating effects in the real world. And it's not all that different from a rivalry of different kind -- a hypothetical sibling rivalry.

A lot of economists go on and on about how currency devaluations help exports and, well... they do. However, if one country does it, others will follow suit and currency wars are just around the corner.
As the name suggests, the countries engaged in a currency war keep doing everything they can to make sure their currency depreciates and each time one of the players engages in competitive devaluations, everyone else tends to reciprocate. A race to the bottom, if you will.
Please like, comment and subscribe if you've enjoyed the video.
To support the channel, please buy my Wealth Management2.0 book. You can find it by searching for "Wealth Management 2.0" on Amazon, Barnes&Noble, iBooks or Kobo. For more information, visit WealthManagement2.com.

Donald Trump and China's Currency War!

Donald Trump flayed China and called it a CurrencyManipulator in his Speech. - On April 2016, a Treasury report targets five countries in particular: China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Germany. Each meets at least two of the three criteria that "determine whether an economy may be pursuing foreign exchange policies that could give it an unfair competitive advantage against the United States."
At a time when currency devaluation has become a major tool used by multiple countries to stimulate growth, the U.S. is looking to protect its own interests. The report is an outgrowth of the Trade Facilitation and TradeEnforcement Act of 2015, a bipartisan effort aimed at stemming the global race to the bottom.
The criteria to determine whether a country should be on the "Monitoring List" of countri...

Currency Wars and What Happened with the Swiss Franc?

Just a really quick and simple video explaining:
- What happened the other day with the Swiss
- What is a currency war and why it happens
- How to profit from the ECB launching a QE program!
More info, please visit: www.InvestingStarterPack.com and www.TheRealisticTrader.com
This is only a basic explanation. I have to state (for the more technical minded) that QE doesn't necessarily mean that they will 'print' more currency. Typically the way the CentralBanks do QE is by buying up bonds or other asset backed securities. For instance, the FED in the US mainly bought US TreasuryBills.
If the ECB does do QE then it's likely to do it with mortgage backed securities and a selection of Eurobonds. But all you need to remember is that QE is just a way for a Central Bank to control how much ...

Currency Wars by James Rickards - Chapter 2 of 11 (Audiobook)

CURRENCY WARS AND MANIPULATION (CHINA & THE YUAN) [EITS #11]

Are we on the verge of seeing a new currency war? China is in a bad situation with their foreign currency reserves and PresidentTrump is not going to accept any more currency manipulation. What will happen? Is this a crisis for China?
Key points in the video:
================
- China has been experiencing impressive levels of growth, but it is non-productive and artificial.
- China has been managing its intrinsic instability through currency manipulation.
- Fear of a currency war has led to massive levels of capital flight, and foreign reserve levels are shaky.
- It appears that China's only feasible option will be to devalue the yuan, leading to negative effects for the global economy.
Based on "China, The Yuan And The Elephant In The Room" article we published on Seeking Alpha:
http:/...

published: 21 Feb 2017

Jim Rickards: Currency Wars and The Death of Money

http://www.nomadcapitalist.com
Jim Rickards' keynote speech at Nomad Capitalist's Passport to Freedom conference in Cancun, January 2015.
Jim discusses the world's Currency Wars, the coming Death of Money, and how to survive and thrive in a world awash with money.
-----
ABOUT NOMAD CAPITALIST
Andrew Henderson travels to nearly 30 countries every year to stay up to date on the latest legal strategies for entrepreneurs and investors to pay less tax, grow their money faster, and build their personal freedom.
Andrew started Nomad Capitalist to help people like you follow his five magic words: "go where you're treated best". He has personally started foreign companies, opened offshore bank accounts, and obtained multiple second passports.
He also learned the hard way that perpetual inform...

published: 08 Nov 2016

Currency Wars and Reform of the International Monetary System

Drawing on his 45 years at the center of international economic policy debates, C. Fred Bergsten argues that currency manipulation is the single biggest challenge facing the world economic system and costs millions of jobs. Bergsten offers bold proposals for countervailing intervention and ties between the International Monetary Fund and the World Trade Organization in evaluating currency misalignments. Following his talk, he is joined in discussion by Rohinton Medhora, CIGIPresident.

published: 30 Sep 2013

Jim Rickards: Will Currency Wars Reorder the World?

Our guest this weekend is Jim Rickards, the author of the 'New York Times' bestseller 'The Death of Money' and a well-known expert in geopolitics and global capital.
Jim and Jeff discuss the unfolding drama at the Fed, which can't decide when—if ever—QE will come to an end. They also discuss possible endgame scenarios for liquidating unprecedented amounts of sovereign, commercial, and household debt; whether coming monetary shocks will present the IMF with an opportunity to demand a global currency reset, and who wins and loses when the game of musical chairs stops. This is a must-hear interview for anyone interested in currency wars, central banks, and the unholy politics behind it all.
See Jim Rickards' 'Strategic Intelligence' newsletter: http://agorafinancial.com/publications/awn

Check out my articles for more!
http://estess.hubpages.com/_youtubetrack/hub/paper-money-history
http://estess.hubpages.com/_youtubetrack/hub/Chinas-Strategy-Appreciating-the-Yuan
Full video can be found at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fW3fZzfHEX4

Check out my articles for more!
http://estess.hubpages.com/_youtubetrack/hub/paper-money-history
http://estess.hubpages.com/_youtubetrack/hub/Chinas-Strategy-Appreciating-the-Yuan
Full video can be found at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fW3fZzfHEX4

Why you should care about currency wars

A currency war sounds weirdly abstract, like a game played by rival politicians -- but it can have devastating effects in the real world. And it's not all that ...

A currency war sounds weirdly abstract, like a game played by rival politicians -- but it can have devastating effects in the real world. And it's not all that different from a rivalry of different kind -- a hypothetical sibling rivalry.

A currency war sounds weirdly abstract, like a game played by rival politicians -- but it can have devastating effects in the real world. And it's not all that different from a rivalry of different kind -- a hypothetical sibling rivalry.

A lot of economists go on and on about how currency devaluations help exports and, well... they do. However, if one country does it, others will follow suit and...

A lot of economists go on and on about how currency devaluations help exports and, well... they do. However, if one country does it, others will follow suit and currency wars are just around the corner.
As the name suggests, the countries engaged in a currency war keep doing everything they can to make sure their currency depreciates and each time one of the players engages in competitive devaluations, everyone else tends to reciprocate. A race to the bottom, if you will.
Please like, comment and subscribe if you've enjoyed the video.
To support the channel, please buy my Wealth Management2.0 book. You can find it by searching for "Wealth Management 2.0" on Amazon, Barnes&Noble, iBooks or Kobo. For more information, visit WealthManagement2.com.

A lot of economists go on and on about how currency devaluations help exports and, well... they do. However, if one country does it, others will follow suit and currency wars are just around the corner.
As the name suggests, the countries engaged in a currency war keep doing everything they can to make sure their currency depreciates and each time one of the players engages in competitive devaluations, everyone else tends to reciprocate. A race to the bottom, if you will.
Please like, comment and subscribe if you've enjoyed the video.
To support the channel, please buy my Wealth Management2.0 book. You can find it by searching for "Wealth Management 2.0" on Amazon, Barnes&Noble, iBooks or Kobo. For more information, visit WealthManagement2.com.

Donald Trump flayed China and called it a CurrencyManipulator in his Speech. - On April 2016, a Treasury report targets five countries in particular: China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Germany. Each meets at least two of the three criteria that "determine whether an economy may be pursuing foreign exchange policies that could give it an unfair competitive advantage against the United States."
At a time when currency devaluation has become a major tool used by multiple countries to stimulate growth, the U.S. is looking to protect its own interests. The report is an outgrowth of the Trade Facilitation and TradeEnforcement Act of 2015, a bipartisan effort aimed at stemming the global race to the bottom.
The criteria to determine whether a country should be on the "Monitoring List" of countries using unfair currency practices are: a trade surplus of larger than $20 billion, or 0.1 percent of U.S. GDP; a trade surplus with the U.S. that is more than 3 percent of that country's GDP; "persistent one-sided intervention," defined as purchases of foreign currency amounting to more than 2 percent of the country's GDP in a one-year period.
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "EXPOSING: Roman Curia (Catholic Church) And Global Pedophila Networks"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mxGgRSRDuRM
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

Donald Trump flayed China and called it a CurrencyManipulator in his Speech. - On April 2016, a Treasury report targets five countries in particular: China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Germany. Each meets at least two of the three criteria that "determine whether an economy may be pursuing foreign exchange policies that could give it an unfair competitive advantage against the United States."
At a time when currency devaluation has become a major tool used by multiple countries to stimulate growth, the U.S. is looking to protect its own interests. The report is an outgrowth of the Trade Facilitation and TradeEnforcement Act of 2015, a bipartisan effort aimed at stemming the global race to the bottom.
The criteria to determine whether a country should be on the "Monitoring List" of countries using unfair currency practices are: a trade surplus of larger than $20 billion, or 0.1 percent of U.S. GDP; a trade surplus with the U.S. that is more than 3 percent of that country's GDP; "persistent one-sided intervention," defined as purchases of foreign currency amounting to more than 2 percent of the country's GDP in a one-year period.
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "EXPOSING: Roman Curia (Catholic Church) And Global Pedophila Networks"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mxGgRSRDuRM
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

Currency Wars and What Happened with the Swiss Franc?

Just a really quick and simple video explaining:
- What happened the other day with the Swiss
- What is a currency war and why it happens
- How to profit from ...

Just a really quick and simple video explaining:
- What happened the other day with the Swiss
- What is a currency war and why it happens
- How to profit from the ECB launching a QE program!
More info, please visit: www.InvestingStarterPack.com and www.TheRealisticTrader.com
This is only a basic explanation. I have to state (for the more technical minded) that QE doesn't necessarily mean that they will 'print' more currency. Typically the way the CentralBanks do QE is by buying up bonds or other asset backed securities. For instance, the FED in the US mainly bought US TreasuryBills.
If the ECB does do QE then it's likely to do it with mortgage backed securities and a selection of Eurobonds. But all you need to remember is that QE is just a way for a Central Bank to control how much of their currency is out there and to get more of it circulating. And the more Euros they can get out there by buying 'stuff', the more it dilutes/devalues the currency...which then makes the currency fall in value against others...

Just a really quick and simple video explaining:
- What happened the other day with the Swiss
- What is a currency war and why it happens
- How to profit from the ECB launching a QE program!
More info, please visit: www.InvestingStarterPack.com and www.TheRealisticTrader.com
This is only a basic explanation. I have to state (for the more technical minded) that QE doesn't necessarily mean that they will 'print' more currency. Typically the way the CentralBanks do QE is by buying up bonds or other asset backed securities. For instance, the FED in the US mainly bought US TreasuryBills.
If the ECB does do QE then it's likely to do it with mortgage backed securities and a selection of Eurobonds. But all you need to remember is that QE is just a way for a Central Bank to control how much of their currency is out there and to get more of it circulating. And the more Euros they can get out there by buying 'stuff', the more it dilutes/devalues the currency...which then makes the currency fall in value against others...

CURRENCY WARS AND MANIPULATION (CHINA & THE YUAN) [EITS #11]

Are we on the verge of seeing a new currency war? China is in a bad situation with their foreign currency reserves and PresidentTrump is not going to accept an...

Are we on the verge of seeing a new currency war? China is in a bad situation with their foreign currency reserves and PresidentTrump is not going to accept any more currency manipulation. What will happen? Is this a crisis for China?
Key points in the video:
================
- China has been experiencing impressive levels of growth, but it is non-productive and artificial.
- China has been managing its intrinsic instability through currency manipulation.
- Fear of a currency war has led to massive levels of capital flight, and foreign reserve levels are shaky.
- It appears that China's only feasible option will be to devalue the yuan, leading to negative effects for the global economy.
Based on "China, The Yuan And The Elephant In The Room" article we published on Seeking Alpha:
http://seekingalpha.com/article/4046733-china-yuan-elephant-room
================
JOIN US TO LEARN TO TRADE FOR FREE: http://bit.ly/DuomoInnerCircle
================
SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE TRADING VIDEOS: http://bit.ly/DuomoYouTube
================
GET OUR FULL ONLINE COURSE: http://bit.ly/DuomoCourse
================
SOCIAL LINKS:
Website: http://www.duomoinitiative.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/duomoinitiative
Twitter: http://twitter.com/duomoinitiative
Nicholas Twitter: http://twitter.com/nikipuri
Instagram: http://instagram.com/duomoinitiative
Email: contactduomo@duomoinitiative.com

Are we on the verge of seeing a new currency war? China is in a bad situation with their foreign currency reserves and PresidentTrump is not going to accept any more currency manipulation. What will happen? Is this a crisis for China?
Key points in the video:
================
- China has been experiencing impressive levels of growth, but it is non-productive and artificial.
- China has been managing its intrinsic instability through currency manipulation.
- Fear of a currency war has led to massive levels of capital flight, and foreign reserve levels are shaky.
- It appears that China's only feasible option will be to devalue the yuan, leading to negative effects for the global economy.
Based on "China, The Yuan And The Elephant In The Room" article we published on Seeking Alpha:
http://seekingalpha.com/article/4046733-china-yuan-elephant-room
================
JOIN US TO LEARN TO TRADE FOR FREE: http://bit.ly/DuomoInnerCircle
================
SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE TRADING VIDEOS: http://bit.ly/DuomoYouTube
================
GET OUR FULL ONLINE COURSE: http://bit.ly/DuomoCourse
================
SOCIAL LINKS:
Website: http://www.duomoinitiative.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/duomoinitiative
Twitter: http://twitter.com/duomoinitiative
Nicholas Twitter: http://twitter.com/nikipuri
Instagram: http://instagram.com/duomoinitiative
Email: contactduomo@duomoinitiative.com

http://www.nomadcapitalist.com
Jim Rickards' keynote speech at Nomad Capitalist's Passport to Freedom conference in Cancun, January 2015.
Jim discusses the world's Currency Wars, the coming Death of Money, and how to survive and thrive in a world awash with money.
-----
ABOUT NOMAD CAPITALIST
Andrew Henderson travels to nearly 30 countries every year to stay up to date on the latest legal strategies for entrepreneurs and investors to pay less tax, grow their money faster, and build their personal freedom.
Andrew started Nomad Capitalist to help people like you follow his five magic words: "go where you're treated best". He has personally started foreign companies, opened offshore bank accounts, and obtained multiple second passports.
He also learned the hard way that perpetual information seeking is often the biggest barrier to getting the results you want. Many entrepreneurs spend months and even years constantly researching how to pay less in tax or live overseas, but are afraid to make the jump.
As a result, they get stuck and keep paying a fortune in taxes and never get the lifestyle they deserve.
Nomad Capitalist's Youtube channel is based on Andrew's vision that focusing on the end result, rather than the latest shiny object, is the best way to actually obtain the benefits of the Nomad Capitalist lifestyle.
About Andrew: http://www.nomadcapitalist.com/about/
Our website: http://www.nomadcapitalist.com
Our blog: http://www.nomadcapitalist.com/blog/
Work with Andrew: http://www.holanomad.com/

http://www.nomadcapitalist.com
Jim Rickards' keynote speech at Nomad Capitalist's Passport to Freedom conference in Cancun, January 2015.
Jim discusses the world's Currency Wars, the coming Death of Money, and how to survive and thrive in a world awash with money.
-----
ABOUT NOMAD CAPITALIST
Andrew Henderson travels to nearly 30 countries every year to stay up to date on the latest legal strategies for entrepreneurs and investors to pay less tax, grow their money faster, and build their personal freedom.
Andrew started Nomad Capitalist to help people like you follow his five magic words: "go where you're treated best". He has personally started foreign companies, opened offshore bank accounts, and obtained multiple second passports.
He also learned the hard way that perpetual information seeking is often the biggest barrier to getting the results you want. Many entrepreneurs spend months and even years constantly researching how to pay less in tax or live overseas, but are afraid to make the jump.
As a result, they get stuck and keep paying a fortune in taxes and never get the lifestyle they deserve.
Nomad Capitalist's Youtube channel is based on Andrew's vision that focusing on the end result, rather than the latest shiny object, is the best way to actually obtain the benefits of the Nomad Capitalist lifestyle.
About Andrew: http://www.nomadcapitalist.com/about/
Our website: http://www.nomadcapitalist.com
Our blog: http://www.nomadcapitalist.com/blog/
Work with Andrew: http://www.holanomad.com/

Currency Wars and Reform of the International Monetary System

Drawing on his 45 years at the center of international economic policy debates, C. Fred Bergsten argues that currency manipulation is the single biggest challen...

Drawing on his 45 years at the center of international economic policy debates, C. Fred Bergsten argues that currency manipulation is the single biggest challenge facing the world economic system and costs millions of jobs. Bergsten offers bold proposals for countervailing intervention and ties between the International Monetary Fund and the World Trade Organization in evaluating currency misalignments. Following his talk, he is joined in discussion by Rohinton Medhora, CIGIPresident.

Drawing on his 45 years at the center of international economic policy debates, C. Fred Bergsten argues that currency manipulation is the single biggest challenge facing the world economic system and costs millions of jobs. Bergsten offers bold proposals for countervailing intervention and ties between the International Monetary Fund and the World Trade Organization in evaluating currency misalignments. Following his talk, he is joined in discussion by Rohinton Medhora, CIGIPresident.

Our guest this weekend is Jim Rickards, the author of the 'New York Times' bestseller 'The Death of Money' and a well-known expert in geopolitics and global capital.
Jim and Jeff discuss the unfolding drama at the Fed, which can't decide when—if ever—QE will come to an end. They also discuss possible endgame scenarios for liquidating unprecedented amounts of sovereign, commercial, and household debt; whether coming monetary shocks will present the IMF with an opportunity to demand a global currency reset, and who wins and loses when the game of musical chairs stops. This is a must-hear interview for anyone interested in currency wars, central banks, and the unholy politics behind it all.
See Jim Rickards' 'Strategic Intelligence' newsletter: http://agorafinancial.com/publications/awn

Our guest this weekend is Jim Rickards, the author of the 'New York Times' bestseller 'The Death of Money' and a well-known expert in geopolitics and global capital.
Jim and Jeff discuss the unfolding drama at the Fed, which can't decide when—if ever—QE will come to an end. They also discuss possible endgame scenarios for liquidating unprecedented amounts of sovereign, commercial, and household debt; whether coming monetary shocks will present the IMF with an opportunity to demand a global currency reset, and who wins and loses when the game of musical chairs stops. This is a must-hear interview for anyone interested in currency wars, central banks, and the unholy politics behind it all.
See Jim Rickards' 'Strategic Intelligence' newsletter: http://agorafinancial.com/publications/awn

Currency Wars and Reform of the International Monetary System

Drawing on his 45 years at the center of international economic policy debates, C. Fred Bergsten argues that currency manipulation is the single biggest challenge facing the world economic system and costs millions of jobs. Bergsten offers bold proposals for countervailing intervention and ties between the International Monetary Fund and the World Trade Organization in evaluating currency misalignments. Following his talk, he is joined in discussion by Rohinton Medhora, CIGIPresident.

published: 30 Sep 2013

Jim Rickards: Currency Wars and The Death of Money

http://www.nomadcapitalist.com
Jim Rickards' keynote speech at Nomad Capitalist's Passport to Freedom conference in Cancun, January 2015.
Jim discusses the world's Currency Wars, the coming Death of Money, and how to survive and thrive in a world awash with money.
-----
ABOUT NOMAD CAPITALIST
Andrew Henderson travels to nearly 30 countries every year to stay up to date on the latest legal strategies for entrepreneurs and investors to pay less tax, grow their money faster, and build their personal freedom.
Andrew started Nomad Capitalist to help people like you follow his five magic words: "go where you're treated best". He has personally started foreign companies, opened offshore bank accounts, and obtained multiple second passports.
He also learned the hard way that perpetual inform...

published: 08 Nov 2016

How Forex is Traded: Currency Wars

Currency Wars by SteveRuffley of InterTrader http://www.financial-spread-betting.com/intertrader/intertrader.html This is quite an interesting take on how currencies are traded. What are currency wars? PLEASE LIKE AND SHARE so we can bring you more! This describes the 2010 effort by the United States and China to have the lowest value of their currencies. Low currency value aid exports by making them cheaper in comparison to other currencies.

published: 27 Sep 2016

Jim Rickards: Will Currency Wars Reorder the World?

Our guest this weekend is Jim Rickards, the author of the 'New York Times' bestseller 'The Death of Money' and a well-known expert in geopolitics and global capital.
Jim and Jeff discuss the unfolding drama at the Fed, which can't decide when—if ever—QE will come to an end. They also discuss possible endgame scenarios for liquidating unprecedented amounts of sovereign, commercial, and household debt; whether coming monetary shocks will present the IMF with an opportunity to demand a global currency reset, and who wins and loses when the game of musical chairs stops. This is a must-hear interview for anyone interested in currency wars, central banks, and the unholy politics behind it all.
See Jim Rickards' 'Strategic Intelligence' newsletter: http://agorafinancial.com/publications/awn

published: 04 Sep 2015

Donald Trump and China's Currency War!

Donald Trump flayed China and called it a CurrencyManipulator in his Speech. - On April 2016, a Treasury report targets five countries in particular: China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Germany. Each meets at least two of the three criteria that "determine whether an economy may be pursuing foreign exchange policies that could give it an unfair competitive advantage against the United States."
At a time when currency devaluation has become a major tool used by multiple countries to stimulate growth, the U.S. is looking to protect its own interests. The report is an outgrowth of the Trade Facilitation and TradeEnforcement Act of 2015, a bipartisan effort aimed at stemming the global race to the bottom.
The criteria to determine whether a country should be on the "Monitoring List" of countri...

published: 20 Sep 2016

Counting the Cost - China's currency wars

In a move that has unsettled global financial markets, China has devalued its currency once again sparking fears of a global currency war.
The Chinese central bank engineered a small devaluation of the yuan on Tuesday in a move analysts said would keep its products competitive with weaker exchange rates.
But as it manipulates its currency to eke out an economic advantage for its exports, other countries are beginning to feel the pressure.
And with commodity prices falling due to waning demand from China, emerging markets are being the hardest hit. Commodity exporters like Brazil, Indonesia and Malaysia have seen their currencies hit multi-year lows as the price of oil and raw materials slump.
Sim Tshabalala, the co-CEO of Standard Bank, joins Counting the Cost to discuss the currency w...

Currency Wars and Reform of the International Monetary System

Drawing on his 45 years at the center of international economic policy debates, C. Fred Bergsten argues that currency manipulation is the single biggest challen...

Drawing on his 45 years at the center of international economic policy debates, C. Fred Bergsten argues that currency manipulation is the single biggest challenge facing the world economic system and costs millions of jobs. Bergsten offers bold proposals for countervailing intervention and ties between the International Monetary Fund and the World Trade Organization in evaluating currency misalignments. Following his talk, he is joined in discussion by Rohinton Medhora, CIGIPresident.

Drawing on his 45 years at the center of international economic policy debates, C. Fred Bergsten argues that currency manipulation is the single biggest challenge facing the world economic system and costs millions of jobs. Bergsten offers bold proposals for countervailing intervention and ties between the International Monetary Fund and the World Trade Organization in evaluating currency misalignments. Following his talk, he is joined in discussion by Rohinton Medhora, CIGIPresident.

http://www.nomadcapitalist.com
Jim Rickards' keynote speech at Nomad Capitalist's Passport to Freedom conference in Cancun, January 2015.
Jim discusses the world's Currency Wars, the coming Death of Money, and how to survive and thrive in a world awash with money.
-----
ABOUT NOMAD CAPITALIST
Andrew Henderson travels to nearly 30 countries every year to stay up to date on the latest legal strategies for entrepreneurs and investors to pay less tax, grow their money faster, and build their personal freedom.
Andrew started Nomad Capitalist to help people like you follow his five magic words: "go where you're treated best". He has personally started foreign companies, opened offshore bank accounts, and obtained multiple second passports.
He also learned the hard way that perpetual information seeking is often the biggest barrier to getting the results you want. Many entrepreneurs spend months and even years constantly researching how to pay less in tax or live overseas, but are afraid to make the jump.
As a result, they get stuck and keep paying a fortune in taxes and never get the lifestyle they deserve.
Nomad Capitalist's Youtube channel is based on Andrew's vision that focusing on the end result, rather than the latest shiny object, is the best way to actually obtain the benefits of the Nomad Capitalist lifestyle.
About Andrew: http://www.nomadcapitalist.com/about/
Our website: http://www.nomadcapitalist.com
Our blog: http://www.nomadcapitalist.com/blog/
Work with Andrew: http://www.holanomad.com/

http://www.nomadcapitalist.com
Jim Rickards' keynote speech at Nomad Capitalist's Passport to Freedom conference in Cancun, January 2015.
Jim discusses the world's Currency Wars, the coming Death of Money, and how to survive and thrive in a world awash with money.
-----
ABOUT NOMAD CAPITALIST
Andrew Henderson travels to nearly 30 countries every year to stay up to date on the latest legal strategies for entrepreneurs and investors to pay less tax, grow their money faster, and build their personal freedom.
Andrew started Nomad Capitalist to help people like you follow his five magic words: "go where you're treated best". He has personally started foreign companies, opened offshore bank accounts, and obtained multiple second passports.
He also learned the hard way that perpetual information seeking is often the biggest barrier to getting the results you want. Many entrepreneurs spend months and even years constantly researching how to pay less in tax or live overseas, but are afraid to make the jump.
As a result, they get stuck and keep paying a fortune in taxes and never get the lifestyle they deserve.
Nomad Capitalist's Youtube channel is based on Andrew's vision that focusing on the end result, rather than the latest shiny object, is the best way to actually obtain the benefits of the Nomad Capitalist lifestyle.
About Andrew: http://www.nomadcapitalist.com/about/
Our website: http://www.nomadcapitalist.com
Our blog: http://www.nomadcapitalist.com/blog/
Work with Andrew: http://www.holanomad.com/

Currency Wars by SteveRuffley of InterTrader http://www.financial-spread-betting.com/intertrader/intertrader.html This is quite an interesting take on how currencies are traded. What are currency wars? PLEASE LIKE AND SHARE so we can bring you more! This describes the 2010 effort by the United States and China to have the lowest value of their currencies. Low currency value aid exports by making them cheaper in comparison to other currencies.

Currency Wars by SteveRuffley of InterTrader http://www.financial-spread-betting.com/intertrader/intertrader.html This is quite an interesting take on how currencies are traded. What are currency wars? PLEASE LIKE AND SHARE so we can bring you more! This describes the 2010 effort by the United States and China to have the lowest value of their currencies. Low currency value aid exports by making them cheaper in comparison to other currencies.

Our guest this weekend is Jim Rickards, the author of the 'New York Times' bestseller 'The Death of Money' and a well-known expert in geopolitics and global capital.
Jim and Jeff discuss the unfolding drama at the Fed, which can't decide when—if ever—QE will come to an end. They also discuss possible endgame scenarios for liquidating unprecedented amounts of sovereign, commercial, and household debt; whether coming monetary shocks will present the IMF with an opportunity to demand a global currency reset, and who wins and loses when the game of musical chairs stops. This is a must-hear interview for anyone interested in currency wars, central banks, and the unholy politics behind it all.
See Jim Rickards' 'Strategic Intelligence' newsletter: http://agorafinancial.com/publications/awn

Our guest this weekend is Jim Rickards, the author of the 'New York Times' bestseller 'The Death of Money' and a well-known expert in geopolitics and global capital.
Jim and Jeff discuss the unfolding drama at the Fed, which can't decide when—if ever—QE will come to an end. They also discuss possible endgame scenarios for liquidating unprecedented amounts of sovereign, commercial, and household debt; whether coming monetary shocks will present the IMF with an opportunity to demand a global currency reset, and who wins and loses when the game of musical chairs stops. This is a must-hear interview for anyone interested in currency wars, central banks, and the unholy politics behind it all.
See Jim Rickards' 'Strategic Intelligence' newsletter: http://agorafinancial.com/publications/awn

Donald Trump flayed China and called it a CurrencyManipulator in his Speech. - On April 2016, a Treasury report targets five countries in particular: China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Germany. Each meets at least two of the three criteria that "determine whether an economy may be pursuing foreign exchange policies that could give it an unfair competitive advantage against the United States."
At a time when currency devaluation has become a major tool used by multiple countries to stimulate growth, the U.S. is looking to protect its own interests. The report is an outgrowth of the Trade Facilitation and TradeEnforcement Act of 2015, a bipartisan effort aimed at stemming the global race to the bottom.
The criteria to determine whether a country should be on the "Monitoring List" of countries using unfair currency practices are: a trade surplus of larger than $20 billion, or 0.1 percent of U.S. GDP; a trade surplus with the U.S. that is more than 3 percent of that country's GDP; "persistent one-sided intervention," defined as purchases of foreign currency amounting to more than 2 percent of the country's GDP in a one-year period.
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "EXPOSING: Roman Curia (Catholic Church) And Global Pedophila Networks"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mxGgRSRDuRM
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

Donald Trump flayed China and called it a CurrencyManipulator in his Speech. - On April 2016, a Treasury report targets five countries in particular: China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Germany. Each meets at least two of the three criteria that "determine whether an economy may be pursuing foreign exchange policies that could give it an unfair competitive advantage against the United States."
At a time when currency devaluation has become a major tool used by multiple countries to stimulate growth, the U.S. is looking to protect its own interests. The report is an outgrowth of the Trade Facilitation and TradeEnforcement Act of 2015, a bipartisan effort aimed at stemming the global race to the bottom.
The criteria to determine whether a country should be on the "Monitoring List" of countries using unfair currency practices are: a trade surplus of larger than $20 billion, or 0.1 percent of U.S. GDP; a trade surplus with the U.S. that is more than 3 percent of that country's GDP; "persistent one-sided intervention," defined as purchases of foreign currency amounting to more than 2 percent of the country's GDP in a one-year period.
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "EXPOSING: Roman Curia (Catholic Church) And Global Pedophila Networks"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mxGgRSRDuRM
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

Counting the Cost - China's currency wars

In a move that has unsettled global financial markets, China has devalued its currency once again sparking fears of a global currency war.
The Chinese central ...

In a move that has unsettled global financial markets, China has devalued its currency once again sparking fears of a global currency war.
The Chinese central bank engineered a small devaluation of the yuan on Tuesday in a move analysts said would keep its products competitive with weaker exchange rates.
But as it manipulates its currency to eke out an economic advantage for its exports, other countries are beginning to feel the pressure.
And with commodity prices falling due to waning demand from China, emerging markets are being the hardest hit. Commodity exporters like Brazil, Indonesia and Malaysia have seen their currencies hit multi-year lows as the price of oil and raw materials slump.
Sim Tshabalala, the co-CEO of Standard Bank, joins Counting the Cost to discuss the currency war and the economic fallout on nations like South Africa.
Also on this episode of Counting the Cost: Show me the money: Nigeria and President Buhari's efforts to fight corruption; and, singapore at 50: What lies ahead?
Subscribe to our channel http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
Find us on Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

In a move that has unsettled global financial markets, China has devalued its currency once again sparking fears of a global currency war.
The Chinese central bank engineered a small devaluation of the yuan on Tuesday in a move analysts said would keep its products competitive with weaker exchange rates.
But as it manipulates its currency to eke out an economic advantage for its exports, other countries are beginning to feel the pressure.
And with commodity prices falling due to waning demand from China, emerging markets are being the hardest hit. Commodity exporters like Brazil, Indonesia and Malaysia have seen their currencies hit multi-year lows as the price of oil and raw materials slump.
Sim Tshabalala, the co-CEO of Standard Bank, joins Counting the Cost to discuss the currency war and the economic fallout on nations like South Africa.
Also on this episode of Counting the Cost: Show me the money: Nigeria and President Buhari's efforts to fight corruption; and, singapore at 50: What lies ahead?
Subscribe to our channel http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
Find us on Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

Jim Rickards: Currency Wars Simulation

Check out my articles for more!
http://estess.hubpages.com/_youtubetrack/hub/paper-money-history
http://estess.hubpages.com/_youtubetrack/hub/Chinas-Strategy-Appreciating-the-Yuan
Full video can be found at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fW3fZzfHEX4

Why you should care about currency wars

A currency war sounds weirdly abstract, like a game played by rival politicians -- but it can have devastating effects in the real world. And it's not all that different from a rivalry of different kind -- a hypothetical sibling rivalry.

28:01

The Currency Wars and Bitcoin's Neutrality

This talk took place on December 3rd 2016 at the Coinscrum {MiniCon}, hosted by Imperial C...

A lot of economists go on and on about how currency devaluations help exports and, well... they do. However, if one country does it, others will follow suit and currency wars are just around the corner.
As the name suggests, the countries engaged in a currency war keep doing everything they can to make sure their currency depreciates and each time one of the players engages in competitive devaluations, everyone else tends to reciprocate. A race to the bottom, if you will.
Please like, comment and subscribe if you've enjoyed the video.
To support the channel, please buy my Wealth Management2.0 book. You can find it by searching for "Wealth Management 2.0" on Amazon, Barnes&Noble, iBooks or Kobo. For more information, visit WealthManagement2.com.

Donald Trump and China's Currency War!

Donald Trump flayed China and called it a CurrencyManipulator in his Speech. - On April 2016, a Treasury report targets five countries in particular: China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Germany. Each meets at least two of the three criteria that "determine whether an economy may be pursuing foreign exchange policies that could give it an unfair competitive advantage against the United States."
At a time when currency devaluation has become a major tool used by multiple countries to stimulate growth, the U.S. is looking to protect its own interests. The report is an outgrowth of the Trade Facilitation and TradeEnforcement Act of 2015, a bipartisan effort aimed at stemming the global race to the bottom.
The criteria to determine whether a country should be on the "Monitoring List" of countries using unfair currency practices are: a trade surplus of larger than $20 billion, or 0.1 percent of U.S. GDP; a trade surplus with the U.S. that is more than 3 percent of that country's GDP; "persistent one-sided intervention," defined as purchases of foreign currency amounting to more than 2 percent of the country's GDP in a one-year period.
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "EXPOSING: Roman Curia (Catholic Church) And Global Pedophila Networks"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mxGgRSRDuRM
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

Currency Wars

Currency Wars (simplified Chinese:货币战争; traditional Chinese:貨幣戰爭; pinyin:Huòbì zhànzhēng) by Song Hongbing, also known as The Currency War, is a bestseller in China, reportedly selling over 200,000 copies in addition to an estimated 400,000 pirated copies in circulation and is reportedly being read by many senior level government and business leaders in China. Originally published in 2007 the book gained a resurgence in 2009 and is seen as a prominent exponent of a recently emerged genre labeled "economic nationalist" literature. Another bestselling book within this genre is Unhappy China, however, unlike this and other books within this genre, Currency Wars has been received more positively by the Chinese leadership as its recommendations are seen as less aggressive towards the US. The premise of this book is that Western countries are ultimately controlled by a group of private banks, which, according to the book, runs their central banks. This book uses the claim that the Federal Reserve is a private body to support its role. More than one million copies of this book have been sold.

Currency Wars and Reform of the International Monetary System

Drawing on his 45 years at the center of international economic policy debates, C. Fred Bergsten argues that currency manipulation is the single biggest challenge facing the world economic system and costs millions of jobs. Bergsten offers bold proposals for countervailing intervention and ties between the International Monetary Fund and the World Trade Organization in evaluating currency misalignments. Following his talk, he is joined in discussion by Rohinton Medhora, CIGIPresident.

Jim Rickards: Currency Wars and The Death of Money

http://www.nomadcapitalist.com
Jim Rickards' keynote speech at Nomad Capitalist's Passport to Freedom conference in Cancun, January 2015.
Jim discusses the world's Currency Wars, the coming Death of Money, and how to survive and thrive in a world awash with money.
-----
ABOUT NOMAD CAPITALIST
Andrew Henderson travels to nearly 30 countries every year to stay up to date on the latest legal strategies for entrepreneurs and investors to pay less tax, grow their money faster, and build their personal freedom.
Andrew started Nomad Capitalist to help people like you follow his five magic words: "go where you're treated best". He has personally started foreign companies, opened offshore bank accounts, and obtained multiple second passports.
He also learned the hard way that perpetual information seeking is often the biggest barrier to getting the results you want. Many entrepreneurs spend months and even years constantly researching how to pay less in tax or live overseas, but are afraid to make the jump.
As a result, they get stuck and keep paying a fortune in taxes and never get the lifestyle they deserve.
Nomad Capitalist's Youtube channel is based on Andrew's vision that focusing on the end result, rather than the latest shiny object, is the best way to actually obtain the benefits of the Nomad Capitalist lifestyle.
About Andrew: http://www.nomadcapitalist.com/about/
Our website: http://www.nomadcapitalist.com
Our blog: http://www.nomadcapitalist.com/blog/
Work with Andrew: http://www.holanomad.com/

How Forex is Traded: Currency Wars

Currency Wars by SteveRuffley of InterTrader http://www.financial-spread-betting.com/intertrader/intertrader.html This is quite an interesting take on how currencies are traded. What are currency wars? PLEASE LIKE AND SHARE so we can bring you more! This describes the 2010 effort by the United States and China to have the lowest value of their currencies. Low currency value aid exports by making them cheaper in comparison to other currencies.

24:35

Jim Rickards: Will Currency Wars Reorder the World?

Our guest this weekend is Jim Rickards, the author of the 'New York Times' bestseller 'The...

Jim Rickards: Will Currency Wars Reorder the World?

Our guest this weekend is Jim Rickards, the author of the 'New York Times' bestseller 'The Death of Money' and a well-known expert in geopolitics and global capital.
Jim and Jeff discuss the unfolding drama at the Fed, which can't decide when—if ever—QE will come to an end. They also discuss possible endgame scenarios for liquidating unprecedented amounts of sovereign, commercial, and household debt; whether coming monetary shocks will present the IMF with an opportunity to demand a global currency reset, and who wins and loses when the game of musical chairs stops. This is a must-hear interview for anyone interested in currency wars, central banks, and the unholy politics behind it all.
See Jim Rickards' 'Strategic Intelligence' newsletter: http://agorafinancial.com/publications/awn

30:29

Donald Trump and China's Currency War!

Donald Trump flayed China and called it a Currency Manipulator in his Speech. - On April 2...

Donald Trump and China's Currency War!

Donald Trump flayed China and called it a CurrencyManipulator in his Speech. - On April 2016, a Treasury report targets five countries in particular: China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Germany. Each meets at least two of the three criteria that "determine whether an economy may be pursuing foreign exchange policies that could give it an unfair competitive advantage against the United States."
At a time when currency devaluation has become a major tool used by multiple countries to stimulate growth, the U.S. is looking to protect its own interests. The report is an outgrowth of the Trade Facilitation and TradeEnforcement Act of 2015, a bipartisan effort aimed at stemming the global race to the bottom.
The criteria to determine whether a country should be on the "Monitoring List" of countries using unfair currency practices are: a trade surplus of larger than $20 billion, or 0.1 percent of U.S. GDP; a trade surplus with the U.S. that is more than 3 percent of that country's GDP; "persistent one-sided intervention," defined as purchases of foreign currency amounting to more than 2 percent of the country's GDP in a one-year period.
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "EXPOSING: Roman Curia (Catholic Church) And Global Pedophila Networks"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mxGgRSRDuRM
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

24:57

Counting the Cost - China's currency wars

In a move that has unsettled global financial markets, China has devalued its currency onc...

Counting the Cost - China's currency wars

In a move that has unsettled global financial markets, China has devalued its currency once again sparking fears of a global currency war.
The Chinese central bank engineered a small devaluation of the yuan on Tuesday in a move analysts said would keep its products competitive with weaker exchange rates.
But as it manipulates its currency to eke out an economic advantage for its exports, other countries are beginning to feel the pressure.
And with commodity prices falling due to waning demand from China, emerging markets are being the hardest hit. Commodity exporters like Brazil, Indonesia and Malaysia have seen their currencies hit multi-year lows as the price of oil and raw materials slump.
Sim Tshabalala, the co-CEO of Standard Bank, joins Counting the Cost to discuss the currency war and the economic fallout on nations like South Africa.
Also on this episode of Counting the Cost: Show me the money: Nigeria and President Buhari's efforts to fight corruption; and, singapore at 50: What lies ahead?
Subscribe to our channel http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
Find us on Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

BEIJING, May 24 (Reuters) - China is a long-term and responsible investor in the euro and hopes the currency will be strong and steady, in spite of the occasional sovereign debt crisis in Europe, PremierLi Keqiang said on Thursday ... "The euro is an important choice in our foreign currency reserves, and so we are continuing to buy European debt," Li said....

China on Thursday extended currency swap agreement with Pakistan amid reports that Beijing has given a $1 billion loan to Islamabad to help it avert a foreign currency crisis. The People's Bank of China, the country's central bank, said today it had extended a currency swap agreement with the State Bank of Pakistan... A currency swap deal allows two ......

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — Under pressure to act, Turkey's central bank sharply raised its key lending rate Wednesday to try to stem an outflow of capital from the country, control inflation and support the beleaguered currency... ....

LAGOS, May 24 (Reuters) - The currencies of Nigeria, Kenya, Uganda and Zambia are expected to come under pressure against the dollar next week while those of Ghana and Tanzania are expected to be steady ... "We project that the central bank will provide some funds to improve supply of dollars on the market to stabilise, or at least, slow the pace of depreciation of the local currency," said currency trader Raphael Adubila....

Singapore’s central bank and financial regulatory authority has warned eight digital currency exchanges in the country not to allow the trading of tokens without its consent ... According to the report, cryptocurrency tokens that are deemed as securities or futures contracts means that digital currency exchanges must cease trading them until they have received the appropriate approval from MAS ... Featured image from Shutterstock. ....